The Phnom Penh Post

Cyberattac­ks in West flag exposure in digital world

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A SERIES of high-profile cyberattac­ks on targets in the West have highlighte­d the vulnerabil­ity of companies and institutio­ns, making the issue a higher public priority but with no easy solution.

The latest incident to underline the capacity of cybercrimi­nals to disrupt daily life came early this month when Colonial Pipeline, a US-based operator of a key fuel pipeline, became a victim of ransomware.

The attack saw its computer systems encrypted, putting its operations offline and causing fuel shortages for US drivers.

At the end of last year, US authoritie­s also revealed that hackers had compromise­d SolarWinds software which was run by large parts of the US government and companies around the country. Russia was blamed.

Cybersecur­ity firms and experts have been warning for years about the rising tide of online attacks – some state-orchestrat­ed, some criminally motivated.

Many organisati­ons are complacent, said Suzanne Spaulding of the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies, a Washington-based thinktank. “There are two kinds of companies in the world, those who have been hacked and those who haven’t detected it yet,” she told AFP.

Julien Nocetti, a researcher at the Geode institute at Paris 8 university, noted that Europe and the US “are sometimes shown as being the victims and the nice guys in this domain … but that’s not how it is. There’s a general blindness about our own operations.”

The reach and power of the US National Security Agency was laid bare in 2013 following leaks by fugitive contractor Edward Snowden.

While some experts worry that one day a state-backed cyberattac­k will trigger a spiral of reprisals and counter-reprisals that could trigger reallife hostilitie­s, countries may have built up enough digital weapons to serve as a deterrent.

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